Kirt's Cogitations™ #242Choose Your Welfare System

I will pose here a question with a seemingly obvious answer – a rhetorical one of
sorts. Most likely to you and definitely to me, the answer indeed is obvious, but unfortunately for far too many, the answer is what is termed
a non sequitur. Here is the question:

If you accept the fact that the government is going to extort outrageous tax dollars from the
producers of society, would you rather that the money be spent distributing handouts to people who have no intention of contributing positively
to the economy, or to companies who employ those willing to be productive and thus ease the overall burden on everyone?

Most politicians,
whose primary function in life is, based on empirical evidence, to get elected and then remain in office, know from ample experience that
rewarding certain types of bad behavior can have its advantages. For instance, if a lazy person knows that he can indulge his inclinations
and is content with just eking out a continued existence, then he is happy to spend his days living off the hard work of others. If we are
fortunate, he will at best cause no trouble for the rest of us beyond the bite he takes out of our paychecks. At worst – and this is all
too often the case – his idle lifestyle will provide opportunity for causing mischief. That, of course, will require that more be withheld
from our paychecks in the form of taxes to police, prosecute, incarcerate, rehabilitate, and then monitor him his entire life. Generations
of such people have been created and coddled all for the sake of maintaining a nice, fat, somewhat reliable voter base for politicians.

That same slothful group, with much more time on their hands than working people can spare, are rallied to action and fed with a
constant barrage of lectures on how the working people of the country are responsible for their woes, and that more must be exacted from
their oppressors in the name of fairness. The government now runs ads practically begging people to go apply for food stamps, go to free
clinics, or claim some sort of protected class status to qualify for yet another type of handout. Independent businesses thrive now on teaching
people how to get the taxpayers to fund whatever it is they perceive that they need or maybe just want). Anyone who dares to protest the
largess availed to the complainers is called uncaring or racist or xenophobic or insensitive or hateful or <insert your favorite self-debasing
pejorative here>. Remember the Katrina hurricane aftermath, where looters filled shopping carts with TVs, Xboxes, and sporting goods while
casually strolling through damaged Wal-Marts? How many times were we told not to criticize them since they were just getting something back
from the system that had exploited them?

So, like thermal runaway in an amplifier, a tiny overstress provides the initial momentum,
and the entire system feeds on itself and increases in amplitude beyond the intended safe operational limit until finally a breaking point
is reached. Unlike the amplifier, though, that has no capacity for increasing its own failure point when needed, society has politicians
to wring more life out of the working people so that the welfare system can be sustained and increased to an even higher level. In the U.S.
alone, we transfer trillions of dollars per year in the form of welfare, urban development, entitlements (off-budget items like Medicare,
Medicaid, Social Security), unemployment, and other programs directly to individuals as well as to organizations that dole out goods and
services (with a tidy cut for themselves, of course).

It wouldn’t be so bad if it was permissible to require the lazy class to perform
public services for handouts from the public trough, but they cannot even be asked to work for their booty. But making a second- or third-generation
gang member or welfare queen pick up trash or dig a ditch would hurt his or her delicate sensitivities, don’t you know?

Now let us
consider the other form of government expenditure - often referred to by the aforementioned class, and by those who feed that system by shaking
the rest of us down – as “corporate welfare.” A moral equivalence is made between the two that does not even come close to passing logical
muster.

When the government writes a check to a private company for providing a good and/or a service, that money is being used to
pay productive people to do work. It contributes to an overall sense of well-being and pride in accomplishment by those performing the labor.
It does not matter whether the person is a manager, engineer, clerk, janitor, or accountant, each is actively engaged in a vocation of choice.
According to numerous recent surveys, a relatively small percentage of people work at jobs they despise (particularly in countries with generous
social welfare programs, where it is easy to subsist on government largess, aka taxpayer money).

One can argue over the equity –
or inequity – of how the funds are distributed within the companies receiving government contracts, but the fact is that generally a trickle
down effect occurs. With all the requirements placed on recipients of government contracts, especially large ones, employees benefit handily
from the corporation’s well being in the form of health care, life insurance, retirement assistance, facilities (work environment), protection
against discrimination, and a host of other creature comforts. Yes, in the larger companies the CEO probably makes a hundred times what the
floor sweeper makes, but that is generally the case in a free market regardless of where the contracts originate. It is interesting how the
same people who complain about a CEO making a million dollars a year while he/she makes thirty thousand, will cheer on a sports figure who
just signed a multi-million dollar contract while the guy who wipes said super star’s sweat off the locker room bench makes a pittance.

Admittedly, there is a lot of waste and fraud that occurs within the government contracting realm, but the difference between that
and the waste and fraud going on in the social welfare system is that at least with the former the money is going to people who work for
a living and provide jobs for others who work for a living. That is not an endorsement of the behavior, just a recognition of the difference.

Obviously, I write from the perspective of an American in a grueling election year (and as one who just paid a sickening amount of
income taxes), but in reading extensively on the condition of other countries, we actually have it better than many of the very socialist
countries. Those of you who live under such systems are painfully aware of the portion of your hard-earned euros, pounds, or whatever, that
are extorted from your paychecks. All of us who have chosen to be net contributors to the world have long paid the price in many forms for
those who leech off of our willingness to shrug it off and hope that the politicians are merciful enough to keep the pain level just short
of unbearable. That is the key to their success at their political craft – they know just how hard to push. Take a little more from us. Give
a little more to them. Build the voter base of the lazy until it reaches critical mass to where their numbers outweigh ours. At that point,
the biggest challenge is actually getting the lazy out to vote.

Every time I read of proposed budget cuts to NASA or to funding of
university/corporate research or to highway construction/maintenance or to many other programs that promote healthy activities for the advancement
of society in order to divert funds to failed programs that only augment and perpetuate the lazy, my head wants to explode. The government
refuses to tie benefits to the lazy to a demonstration of changes in their own habits that keep them down, but then we see reports where
IBM or Lockheed Martin or Northrop Grumman are temporarily banned from receiving government contracts until they prove that their “bad” habits
or practices have been changed. It is utter insanity, and perhaps the most exasperating aspect of it all is that the producers of the world
have the power to change the system, but do not.

A huge collection of my 'Factoids' can be accessed from my 'Kirt's Cogitations'
table of contents.

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